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Before the Frost reading, which all but alleviated the Advocate's problems, the magazine's situation was almost desperate. Its publishing schedule was practically non-existent, there was no printer's deadline, and the subscriptions and circulation had become increasingly chaotic...

Author: By C. BOYDEN Gray, | Title: 'Advocate' to Publish This Term, But Fails to Win Trustees' Aid | 5/9/1962 | See Source »

...present publishing schedule is virtually nonexistant, Urrutia admitted, as the staff has yet to produce a scheduled issue this year. "We have to regularize the printing--the Advocate has never had a printer's deadline...

Author: By C. BOYDEN Gray, | Title: 'Advocate' Seeks Outside Support to Overcome Financial Problems | 3/26/1962 | See Source »

...distributor, Harold O. who distributes programs at B.U. and is the printer for the Harvard program, will use Harvard students as much as possible, Pittenger present plans call for straight ten commissions for sellers, as the HSA incentive system. It that this will probably lead to for the individual seller old method...

Author: By Joseph M. Russin, | Title: Outside Firm Distribute | 3/23/1962 | See Source »

Take a Picture. With this development, the possibilities of web offset became readily visible to commercial printers. The rubber offset cylinder was able to reproduce, on rough grades of paper such as newsprint, impressions of far greater fidelity than letterpress. And since anything can be photographed, offset printing plates can be prepared without the use of metallic type. "You can make up a page," said one Midwest printer, "simply by cutting anything out of a magazine and taking a picture of it." Web offset also adapts more readily than either letterpress or gravure to many of the new experimental techniques...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Up from the Stone Age | 3/16/1962 | See Source »

Life was becoming increasingly litigious for privacy-seeking Poet e. e. cummings, 67, ("i use capitals ONLY for emphasis"), who last fall went to court for resisting plumbing improvements to his Greenwich Village digs. Latest cause célébre was a complaint that his printer and a book dealer had peddled a number of his original manuscripts without authorization. Cummings was so agitated that he signed the lawsuit with upper-case initials...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jan. 26, 1962 | 1/26/1962 | See Source »

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